Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Agility puts British ahead of EU rivals in vaccine scramble

- RAF CASERT AND MASHA MACPHERSON Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Danica Kirka, Frank Jordans, Geir Moulson, Mark Carlson, Sam Petrequin, Angela Charlton and Daniel Cole of The Associated Press.

SAINT-HERBLAIN, France — French pharmaceut­ical startup Valneva had big news in September: a government contract for 60 million doses of its coronaviru­s vaccine candidate.

The buyer? The United Kingdom — not the European Union, as might be expected for a company on the banks of the Loire.

“What a true waste,” bristled Christelle Morancais, president of the Pays de la Loire regional council. The British, she told The Associated Press, “rolled out the red carpet for this company, helping with financing and the set-up. … And we were powerless.”

The U.K. has now ordered another 40 million doses and has options for more from Valneva, which has a plant in Scotland. The EU is still in talks with the company.

That pattern of Britain investing aggressive­ly and early while the EU takes a slower, more cautious approach has been the hallmark of the vaccine race in Europe — and offers a window into problems that have dogged the vaccinatio­n rollout by the world’s biggest trading bloc.

As with other countries that moved quickly, negotiatin­g contracts earlier has helped Britain avoid some of the vaccine supply problems the 27-nation EU has faced. Valneva President Franck Grimaud told the AP that Britain will receive vaccine doses earlier because it signed first.

But the U.K. has also shown speed and agility in other areas: Its regulatory agency has authorized vaccines more quickly than the EU’s, and its government has experiment­ed with stretching out the time between shots — allowing it to roll out first doses faster so more people can have some protection quickly.

The EU has been more cautious on both counts. While bloc is still getting and distributi­ng vaccine — unlike much of the world — it has so far been left in the U.K.’s rearview mirror. Britain has given at least one shot to about 15% of its population, compared with some 3% in the bloc. This is not only a matter of pride: The EU has already lost more than 490,000 out of its 450 million people to the pandemic, according to Johns Hopkins University, and uncounted others who were not tested before they died.

Britain has its own struggles: a death toll of 112,000 in a country of 67 million and plenty who say the Conservati­ve government should have moved faster to fight the virus. Still, it celebrated the Valneva contract as validation of its vaccine strategy — and its decision to leave the EU.

“We’ve backed many horses — no matter where they’re from,” Health Secretary Matt Hancock said. “It’s a great example of what we can achieve together, working as one United Kingdom.”

At the same time, EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen was at the European Parliament, answering questions about how things could have gone so wrong in a drive that was supposed to showcase how the EU makes its 27 members stronger.

She admitted EU errors — specifical­ly a threat, eventually retracted, of border checks on vaccines from EU member Ireland to Northern Ireland, which is part of the U.K. But she was steadfast that the bloc’s deliberate drive would prove successful.

“I see this as a marathon in which we just finished the first few kilometers,” she said.

When the virus took hold of the continent a year ago and the race for a vaccine began, the EU trumpeted its size as an asset in vaccine negotiatio­ns. The bloc did get competitiv­e prices, but that took time — and the difference of a few months has cost it.

When the EU had a major row with AstraZenec­a last month over the company’s announceme­nt it would only be able to deliver 31 million doses of a promised first batch of 80 million, CEO Pascal Soriot pointed out that “the U.K. contract was signed three months before the European vaccine deal. So with the U.K. we have had an extra three months to fix all the glitches.”

The EU was also slower to approve vaccines, opting for a longer process that gave the shots fuller scrutiny from the European Medicines Agency, rather than emergency authorizat­ion, to ensure greater public confidence, a decision it still defends.

As a result, Britain started giving out vaccine shots on Dec. 8 while the EU did not get going until Dec. 27. It has not caught up since.

France’s Europe Minister Clement Beaune has said “Britain has taken enormous risks.”

If that’s true, it’s paid off. Britain’s health chief last week hailed a new study suggesting that a single dose of the AstraZenec­a vaccine offers strong protection for 12 weeks against the virus, saying that supports the government’s much-debated strategy of delaying the second shot.

Compare that with France, which flirted with extending the time between doses but decided not to. Other EU countries have sometimes held back doses to make absolutely sure a person could get a second shot at a specific time, thus denying a first shot for others.

Several EU nations have also proven even more riskaverse than the cautious European Medicines Agency, which approved the AstraZenec­a vaccine for use in the EU for all adults, despite some questions about whether there was enough data on its impact on the elderly.

Germany, France and Sweden decided to hold off on giving the AstraZenec­a vaccine to those 65 and over. Belgium went further, restrictin­g use to those under 55, even if it means carefully laid vaccinatio­n plans will have to be changed.

The EU’s deliberate approach, however, may have prevented other problems. Without a joint strategy, smaller and poorer EU nations could have struggled to secure and pay for vaccines. With open borders, diverging national approaches could have led to chaos.

Despite the slow start, von der Leyen’s pledge to have 70% of the bloc’s adults vaccinated by the end of summer stands.

 ?? (AP/Valentina Petrova) ?? A medical worker prepares a dose of the Oxford-AstraZenec­a covid-19 vaccine Sunday in Sofia, Bulgaria.
(AP/Valentina Petrova) A medical worker prepares a dose of the Oxford-AstraZenec­a covid-19 vaccine Sunday in Sofia, Bulgaria.

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